It goes to the President for either his signature or a veto.
After a bill passes both Houses of Congress it goes to the President for the final signature.
After it passes both houses of congress.
There is a joint conference committee , composed of members of both houses, that try to workout a version of the bill that both houses will accept.
If both houses of congress pass it, it goes to the president. If and when he signs it, it becomes law.
no. the president is the third part it has to go through. but if he vetoed it they can override him.
A law when it is first proposed is a bill. When it passes both houses of the legislature and signed by the chief executive (governor or president) it then becomes a law.
If both houses of congress vote by 2/3 to override a presidential veto, it automatically becomes law despite the President's veto.
It goes back to both houses for approval.
In the United States, both houses of Congress, the House of Representatives and the Senate, pass laws before they can be presented to the president. The bill must be approved by a majority vote in both chambers of Congress before it can be sent to the president for final approval or veto.
Could be a street, or road.
When Congress passes a bill and the president then uses his power of veto the bill can go through Congress again. If both houses then vote 2/3 or more the second time for the bill then it passes and becomes law.
When Congress passes a bill and the president then uses his power of veto the bill can go through Congress again. If both houses then vote 2/3 or more the second time for the bill then it passes and becomes law.